The Wildlife Trust of India is transforming the Greater Manas landscape by reviving habitats, reintroducing wildlife, and empowering local communities. Their long-term conservation efforts have restored ecological balance and renewed hope for one of India’s most iconic landscapes.
Through land acquisition, habitat restoration, and community-led conservation, the Kannur Kandal Project is safeguarding Kannur’s fragile mangrove ecosystems.
Think of an elephant corridor as a conduit, a migratory route from one habitat to another. But what happens when roads are built over these routes? This unique project is mapping out elephant corridors to ensure gentle giants can migrate without clashing with communities.
Uttar Pradesh’s sarus crane, once seen as a pest and pushed out by shrinking wetlands, is finding its way back—thanks to farmers who now protect its nests and habitats. Through the Sarus Habitat Securement Project, villages across 10 districts are reviving the bird’s population and restoring crucial wetlands.
Wildlife Trust of India’s 'Amphibian Recovery Project' works to protect India’s threatened frog and toad species through habitat restoration, population monitoring, and community engagement.
In the wet markets of Northeast India, illegal pangolin trade once posed a major threat to the numbers of the species of the world’s most trafficked mammal. But a unique project is now helping.
A team at Arunachal Pradesh’s CBRC guides orphaned Asiatic black bear cubs back into the wild. The story follows one such journey, capturing the team’s dedication, the gruelling terrain, and the triumph of giving these cubs a second chance at life.